Wooten v. Railroad

56 L.R.A. 615, 38 S.E. 298, 128 N.C. 119, 1901 N.C. LEXIS 351
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedApril 9, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 56 L.R.A. 615 (Wooten v. Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wooten v. Railroad, 56 L.R.A. 615, 38 S.E. 298, 128 N.C. 119, 1901 N.C. LEXIS 351 (N.C. 1901).

Opinion

MoNtgomjery, J.

This ease was heard in the Count below upon an agreed state of facts — those material to the decision of the ease being as follows: Eliza Claudia Bradley died in 1854, leaving a last will and testament in which she bequeathed to her son, Charles W. Bradley, 20 shares of capital stock of the Wilmington and Baleigh Railroad Company (now lire Wilmington and Weldon Railroad Co.), registered in her own name on the stock, ledger of the company, to be held by him in trust for the sole and separate benefit of the testaitorix’s daughter, Lucy B. Jewett, during’ her life^ and upon her death to the use and benefit of such children as she might leave surviving her. On December 1 following, Charles W. Bradley and James A. Bradley, the duly qualified executors named in the will, transferred the 20 shares of stock on the books of the company “to Charles W. Bradley, trustee for Lucy A. Jewett,” and anew certificate of stock was issued by the company in those words. In July, 1869, Charles W. Bradley, trustee, transferred the stock to- Lucy A. Jewett 'absolutely — the word “trustee” appearing on the company’s transfer* ledger after’ Bradley’s name, and a new certificate of stock was issued by the company to Mrs. Jewett individually. Afterwards, in the same year, 1869, after her husband’s death, Mrs. Jewett sold and transferred the stocx to other persons absolutely, and new certificates of stock were issued to' the purchasers, but the stock can not now be identified, nor its ownership traced. The stock was not sold by the executors to pay the debts of Mrs. Bradley — the financial condition of her estate not requiring a sale for that purpose. *121 Tbe defendant eompiany bad no- knowledge- of the condition of Mrs. B-radley’s estate, and mo actual knowledge of tbe contents of ber will. Mrs. Jewett died in 1898, and the plaintiffs are ber children, except tbe plaintiff Edward Wooten, who intermarried with Eliza Yonge Jewett.

The action is brought to- recover from the defendant the value of the stock and the increment by way of dividends which has accrued since the death of Mrs. Jewett.

Tbe question for decision then is -this: Does the transfer of the stock of a corporation on the books of the eompiany by an executor fix tbe corporation with knowledge of the conten is of the will ? If so-, then the transfer of the stock by the executors of Mrs. Bradley to Mrs. Jewett was wrongful, because the trust created in the will in favor of the plaintiffs was not observed in the transfer’, and the plaintiff would be entitled to recover the value of the stock and the accrued dividends since the death of Mrs. Jewett. It is incumbent on a corporation 'to protect the rights of persons interested in the stock of the corporation against un-anithorized transfer of the stock. Cox v. Bank, 119 N. C., 302; Lowry v. Bank, 15 Fed. Cases, 1040. The contention of the- plaintiffs is that when the executors of Mrs. Bradley transí erred on the books of tbe company tbe stock of Charlds W. Bradley as trustee for Mrs. Jewett, the company was fixed with knowledge of the contents of the will, and that in the transfer the trust in favor of the children of Mrs. Jewett, tbe plaintiffs, should have been preserved, under the provisions of the will; that the defendant should have seen that tbe transfer should have been made- to Charles W. Bradley, in trust, or- as trustee for Mrs. Jewett for her life, and at -her death to ber children who- might survive her. Tbe- plaintiffs further contend that the defendant also- committed a wrongful and unlawful act in permitting on its books the transfer of tire stock by Charles W. Bradley, *122 trustee of Mrs. Jewett to Ms cestui que trust absolutely, and tbe transfer by Mrs. Jewett to others.

The defendants insist '(tot, as. the stock on the books stood in the name of Mrs. Bradley, the only thing necessary for it to take notice of when an entry of transfer of the stock should be requested to be made on the books, was the exhibition to it of the letters testamentary from the pr'oper court by the executors, 'the transfer to' follow 'as a matter of course according to the directions of the executors; that the executors’, so far as defendant’s liability is concerned, could have sold and transi-ferred not only the stock, notwithstanding it was specifically bequeathed, but that they could have done so even in fraud, provided the company had no reasonable ground to believe that they were acting fraudulently or disposing of the money for their own benefit in the transaction, and that they could have negligently or fraudulently failed to' execute the trust imposed by the will upon them- in reference to this stock and its transfer, provided the defendant did not have actual knowledge or information which might reasonably put them on their guard concerning the fraud or negligence, at or before the time of the transfer’, and on the ground that in law the personal property of a testator is vested in the executor with the right to sell or dispose of it, 'and that the company was not compelled to. take notice of the contente’ of the will.

The plaintiffs rely principally for authority on the case of Lowery v. Merchants and Farmers Bank, decided in the Circuit Court, District of Maryland, at its April Term, 1848, Chief Justice Taney delivering 'the opinion. In that case the future dividends on a number of shares of stock in the Commercial and Fanners Bank of Baltimore were bequeathed in trust for the complainant during her life and at her death to her daughter Mary, during her life, the executors to receive and pay the same over. The stock and tire other property of the testator were bequeathed to the executors in trust for a *123 number of persons darned in the will, subject to the disposition of the stock to the complainant and her daughter. Samuel Jones, one of the executors, transí erred, as acting executor, this stock to the Merchants Bank as a security for money lent to the executor who was trading under the firm name of Talbot Jones & Co., by the Merchants Bank; and in default of payment for the debt due to the bank the stock was transferred by a broker and by him sold t'o pay the debt. Upon these facts the Court said: “The question then is, had the bank (Commercial and Farmer’s Bank) at the time of the transfer actual or constructive notice that the executor was abusing his trust and applying his stock to his own use? The bank by its answer denies that it knew anything of the contents of Talbot Jones’ will or of the bequest to the complainant, and there is no proof of actual notice; but it did no't know that this stock was the property of Talbot Jones at the time of his death, for it so stood upon its own books; and as the transfer was made by Samuel Jones as his executor, the bank must of course have known that Talbot Jones left a will. Although it may not have had actual notice of the contents of the will, yet, as it w’as dealing with an executor in his character as such, the law implies notice. This is the doctrine in the English Court of Chancery.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Woody v. Pickelsimer
104 S.E.2d 273 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1958)
Middendorf v. Kansas Power & Light Co.
203 P.2d 156 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1949)
King v. Richardson
136 F.2d 849 (Fourth Circuit, 1943)
Bank v. . Leverette
123 S.E. 68 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1924)
Southern State Bank v. Leverette
187 N.C. 743 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1924)
Pritchard v. . Williams
95 S.E. 570 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1918)
Baker v. Atlantic Coast Line Railroad
92 S.E. 170 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1917)
Rea v. . Rea
72 S.E. 873 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1911)
Wooten v. Wilmington & Weldon Railroad
39 S.E. 834 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1901)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
56 L.R.A. 615, 38 S.E. 298, 128 N.C. 119, 1901 N.C. LEXIS 351, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wooten-v-railroad-nc-1901.